The Well: A Story of Love, Death \u0026 Real Life in the Seminal Online Community by Katie Hafner


The Well: A Story of Love, Death \u0026 Real Life in the Seminal Online Community
Title : The Well: A Story of Love, Death \u0026 Real Life in the Seminal Online Community
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0786708468
ISBN-10 : 9780786708468
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 208
Publication : First published April 1, 2001

The Well was conceived during the Orwellian year of 1984, yet instead of heralding Big Brother, it became a boundary-breaking cultural invention that helped change our world. Though few glimpsed its potential, it quickly became indispensable to the evolution of the Internet as we know it today. Its creators were Larry Brilliant, a visionary software engineer and philanthropic doctor, and Stewart Brand, Sixties legend and originator of The Whole Earth Catalog. They imagined a new kind of community, one whose members would meet in everyday space, as ideal communities always have, while also inhabiting a new kind a environment, the virtual ether of a world that hadn't even yet been named.By the end of the 1980s, the pioneering community founded by Brilliant and Brand was attracting thousands of early adopters, from former commune-dwellers to students to technologists to businesspeople to fans of the Grateful Dead, all participating in online conferences with other Well-beings (as they called themselves) on myriad topics. This fascinating anecdotal history unfolds their story. It is filled with memorable personalities and their early electronic postings, which are quoted as they were originally transmitted, as it analyzes the many reasons for The Well's legendary success, from its beginnings less than two decades ago up to the present day, including its recent purchase by salon.com.


The Well: A Story of Love, Death \u0026 Real Life in the Seminal Online Community Reviews


  • Tom Walsh

    I want to think about this book a little before reviewing. To be continued.

    I ordered this book because I am interested in the creation and lifecycle of Communities, both on and offline. I remember the beginnings of the Web, Arpanet, IRC, EIES Network and The Well, participating on EIES briefly in the early ‘80’s.

    Hafner does a good job of highlighting the technological issues facing users of these early networks while addressing the human component that largely determined their fate. In fact, if anything, her tale quite often devolves into the soap opera that The Well became during many of its exciting and troubled periods.

    The subtitle of the book should have alerted me to her approach but I still was expecting more of a combined techno- and socio-logical history of the experiment than she delivered. It may be a comfort to know that regardless of how much technology Humans incorporate into their social and intellectual lives, they still suffer the slings and arrows of the Human Condition.

    Another enjoyable feature of the book was the mention of the activities of a number of the seminal characters of that late ‘70’s - early ‘80’s period like Stewart Brand, Howard Rheingold and John Perry Barlow. If you wanted to see where tech was going back then, those were the people you followed.

    This is a very short work, filled with some fun stories, that humanizes the work and obsessions of an era that underlies today’s all pervasive Online existence. I found it interesting. You might as well.

  • Thom

    This slim volume gives a narrative history of the WELL (an early dial-up forum), focusing on aspects of community and personalities. The medium - text base and occasionally arcane - also plays a part. Invites comparison to other forums and conferences.

    This is one of two books I started on the same day that start with the announcement of a death. Both were on my reading list - this one since 2014 - and both are quick reads. This is non-fiction, and I would guess will be re-released and/or expanded in a few years for a 20th anniversary. The WELL still exists, and wikipedia can give you a lot more information.

    I enjoyed this history and the technical aspects; I ran a free BBS in this same time frame. I see some interesting comparisons to PLATO, and
    The Friendly Orange Glow: The Untold Story of the PLATO System and the Dawn of Cyberculture (which was a better book).

  • Heath

    It's a quick read, but it tells a long story. The Well is one of the earliest and longest-running online communities, and I've been a member for more than 10 years. Hafner's writing reads like much of the writing in the Well: personal, insightful, and very human. She looks at the evolution of the business, as well as some of the highlights -- and low points -- of the relationships among members. Even the darkest of days and most difficult situations is addressed with grace and empathy. Of interest to members, online historians, and community organizations everywhere. An important chapter in the development of the Net!

  • Eamonn McHugh-Roohr

    Short, focused story of an early online community, sometimes in it's own words. Seems to be trying to answer the question "what is a community?" or "can online communities be communities?"

    From the perspective of a reader twenty years later in a world full of social networks, this is still fairly interesting because you can see very similar patterns play out; there are trolls, reviled moderators, consternation, drama, but also excellence-people helping each other out of jams, people treating each other with genuine kindness, and even mourning each other.

    There are two contradictory premises at work. One is that The Well was truly special and something that you can't replicate by creating a threaded forum. The other is that The Well was promoted by media savvy Stuart Brand and Howard Rhinegold et al as this utopian place which can never be replicated. Clearly, the former is the case. I would have liked a bit more clarity around just how similar (or different from) The Well was to the BBS scene which existed at the same time. And of course it also resembles web forums which came later and now social media like Reddit. If there was something truly special here, I fail to be convinced.

  • Jessica

    A narrative perspective of one of the first online communities. Hafner's story of the Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link takes closely details the lives of the people (as opposed to an events-focused chronology) who made up the community, with a focus on Tom Mandel and several other important figures that shapped the Well's history. The work was first published in shorter form as an article in Wired magazine. A clipping pace makes this a quick read that tech junkies will enjoy

  • Sari Lynn

    An interesting look inside the online community. I found it particularly appealing because I was acquainted with a number of the people mentioned, so I was able to relate to the times and events from a more personal perspective.

  • John Stepper

    So much potential but the author never really captures why a small on-line community ever gained the reputation it has. The examples verge on high schoolish.

    Could have been so much more...